This is a clever book; smart and mostly even-tempered. It has an intelligent approach to an urgent topic, and it spends the bulk of the book on scientific controversies and disputes (this book was published before COVID-19 existed as we came to know it, in 2018, and so avoids much of the increased hysteria that ensued). The scientific studies, with a history going back to the late 19th century, explores how individual scientists, whether out of different conclusions, or often mistaken interpretations on results, came to be manipulated by corporate interests and unscrupulous politicians supporting them. There are outright allegations made by the authors about how history proved such agents not just wrong, but guilty of social disruption--even murder--through their selfishness and greed. Of course, trying to be fair, the authors also point out the enraged disputes that emerged based on the far too utopian beliefs of other scientists preaching absolute health, even immortality in the future.
Discussed in detail are lies about smoking, about climate change, and about vaccine debates between unconnected scientists and rabid anti-vaxxers. The authors do their best to take a judicious appraoch, and their subtle bias in fact strengthens their argument rather than dismisses it as a political agenda. The two of them seem sincere.
The most significant part, the science taking up three quarters of the book, uses the models articulated to take on "fake news" and propaganda as expressed on television, in newspapers, and especially online. They discuss just how easy it is to spread such manipulative lies to targeted groups of people through the algorithems we've all heard about and condemned in one way or another. They site sources, and point fingers at disruption sites--mostly Russian--such as RT, which is a sneering, cynical, let's be honest, terrorist Russian propaganda site (I have quite a bit of experience exploring this one in particular) that has fed lies so profoundly into western culture that mainstream news media, seeking the "if it bleeds, it leads" promotions, and frantically pursuing the tabloid nature they have devolved into, turns divisive issues into violent protests over social--even religious divisions, many which are enhanced by such cynicism, into open partisan warfare. Even petty sports debates are inspired into rage by promoting widely hated athletes as the best ever, or condemning others people believe to be so (the Michael Jordan/LeBron James debates are particularly intense, as fans passions, both pro and con, are easily manipulated. Those issues subtlely sink into politics, turning political debate into nothing more than team sports.)
Propaganda techniques are explored, names are named, and the genuine threat--regardless of which side of the political spectrum you find yourself--is warned about. Looking around and seeing the crumbling nature of social discourse, it is difficult to discount the arguments articulated here.
Very much worth your while. Only four stars because, to this reader anyway, one dedicated to the study of media influence and social chaos, the important science studies get a little tedious.